unevenness
IPA: ʌnˈivʌnnʌs
noun
- (uncountable) The quality or characteristic of being uneven; irregularity; inconsistency; the lack of smoothness or continuity.
- (countable) The result or product of being uneven.
- A rough or uneven thing.
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Examples of "unevenness" in Sentences
- Officials noticed there was an "unevenness" in the lining of the shin pads.
- With a convention oven, the circulation of the heat can be uneven; this unevenness occurs when other pans and pots in the oven block the heat.
- Yet there is a kind of unevenness to the Holocaust sites, with some focused on personal and individual experiences and others of broader scope.
- [xxi] The very idea of "unevenness" presupposes a totality; it assumes that the different entities involved here are parts of a larger whole - capitalism and world-history.
- The discussion made it clear that big media hasn’t yet quite figured out what to make of new media, and there was much talk of what Tom called the unevenness of current coverage.
- The Social Security Administration's inspector general is sending a team of fraud investigators to Puerto Rico, following a Wall Street Journal article Tuesday that revealed unevenness in the way disability benefits are awarded around the U.S.
- The stress field is a sprawling one, characterized by unevenness and lack of coordination not unlike many other domains within the behavioral and mental health sciences, with pockets of substantial development separated by faddish, superficial, or one-time forays.
- I maintain that the evident unevenness is not an attempt to ignore overtly what transpired before and in tandem with Swahili history, but rather that it is the result of an unfortunate tendency to assume that the Swahili achievements are occurred because of their historic associations with people and places external to the continent.
- "[I] f Jindabyne doesn't quite coalesce like its taut predecessor, it comes close enough; its unevenness is made up for by its ambitious wanderings through trickier, thought-provoking terrain, and, although it goes slack occasionally, clocking in at just over two hours, the film resonates with rhythmic momentum," writes Kristi Mitsuda at Reverse Shot.
- This new phase of globalization in the world, which has grown more and more interdependent and is awash with opportunities and full of promise, has also been characterized by an unevenness in the way the world economy has developed—so much so that in the financial crisis it looked as if the economy has moved beyond any individual nation’s ability to manage or even navigate on its own.
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